Table of Contents
Contact BIO Intelligence Service
Shailendra Mudgal – Jonathan Bain
℡ + 33 1 53 90 11 80
European Commission (DG ENV)
REFERENCE: 07.0307/2009/549862/ETU/F1
EXPANDING THE EVIDENCE BASE FOR THE
DESIGN OF POLICY INFLUENCING
CONSUMER CHOICE FOR PRODUCTS AND
SERVICES WITH ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
Policy Briefing
June 2011
In association with
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European Commission [DG ENV]
Expanding the Evidence Base for the Design of Policy Influencing Consumer
Choice for Products and Services with Environmental Impacts
June 2011
Project Team
BIO Intelligence Service (BIO)
Mr. Shailendra Mudgal
Mr. Jonathan Bain
Ms. Mary Ann Kong
Mr. Kurt Muehmel
Policy Studies Institute (PSI)
Ms. Kate McGeevor
Mr. Robin Vanner
Ecologic Institute (Ecologic)
Mr. Max Gruenig
Mr. Benjamin Boteler
Disclaimer:
The project team does not accept any liability for any direct or indirect damage resulting from the use
of this report or its content.
This report contains the results of research by the authors and is not to be perceived as the opinion of
the European Commission.
June 2011
European Commission [DG ENV]
Expanding the Evidence Base for the Design of Policy Influencing Consumer
Choice for Products and Services with Environmental Impacts
3
Consumer policy can use a range of tools, such as financial incentives and disincentives,
product and service labels, information provision, or combinations of these measures, to
enable and encourage citizens, as consumers, to make sustainable choices.
Currently, consumer policies are frequently designed under the assumption that
consumers act as 'rational' economic agents, hence policy interventions are frequently
designed to remedy a market failure – for example a lack of information. However, policy
makers should perhaps reconsider this perspective on consumer behaviour, as research
from the field of behavioural economics and marketing strongly suggests that consumers
do not behave as 'rational economic agents', but that they rely on mental short-cuts when
making purchasing decisions.
A first step for policy makers in the process of designing effective policy to influence
consumer choice is to understand how consumers make their purchasing decisions in real
life situations. The study identified several important drivers and other key aspects, some
of which cover behavioural aspects often ignored in traditional consumer policy, that
influence consumer behaviour, including:
• Different dimensions of behavioural economics, which considers social, cognitive
and emotional factors when assessing the economic decisions of consumers (e.g.
the impact of anchoring and adjustment, loss aversion, framing discounting, and
endorsement).
• The presentation and framing of information: the way in which information is
presented and the decision-making context can have a substantial impact on the
choices made by individuals.
• Product differentiation: Comparability is one of consumers’ most important
demands. Consumers want simple and meaningful comparisons.
• Influence of society: People want to feel their behaviour is normal and thus
subscribe to perceived norms.
• Consumer segmentation: Consumers do not think alike, being influenced by factors
such as their religion, gender, age, socio-economic group, education, etc. However,
groupings can be made to divide populations into generalised preferences –
consumer segmentation is an approach that policy makers could potentially use to
target particular audiences with specific policy tools that are best suited to address
the drivers and preferences of that audience.
Once policy makers have an understanding of how certain types of consumers may react to
the policy in question, hypotheses on consumer behaviour can then be developed and
Designing policy to influence consumer choice related to products and
services with environmental impacts
– POLICY BRIEFING –
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European Commission [DG ENV]
Expanding the Evidence Base for the Design of Policy Influencing Consumer
Choice for Products and Services with Environmental Impacts
June 2011
tested through research experiments to gain further understanding about uncertainties
related to the potential policy tool in question. Designing research experiments to test
consumer behaviour also raises awareness about how behavioural and social sciences can
contribute to policies by providing better understanding of consumer behaviour.
Several sequential stages are involved, from the design of the research to the policy
making process:
1. Real world issue characterisation: explore the issue in question from a real world
perspective.
2. Understanding the issue from a real world perspective using the existing evidence
base and possibly initial data gathered to understand the issue within a real world
perspective.
3. Hypothesis development: when developing a hypothesis, it should be possible to
use an objective method to test it.
4. Hypothesis testing including a pilot study: the hypothesis needs to be tested within
a research trial.
5. Implementation / piloting: If the results of the experiment suggest that the policy
would be enhanced by adopting behavioural elements, the policy might be
developed based on this.
6. Review and revision: in light of the information gained through the policy
implementation or piloting, the design of the policy can be reviewed and refined.
When designing any research trial or attempting to measure the impact of an intervention
on consumer behaviour, there are a number of important key concepts to consider. These
are discussed in full within the report, and include:
• The counter factual: the outcome that would have occurred had the intervention
not been implemented.
• Sampling frame: the extent to which research is reliable and able to be generalised
is heavily determined by the people (or ‘subjects’) that are the focus of the
research itself.
The study identified a certain number of uncertainties about consumer behaviour that
could provide areas of investigation for future studies and research. These uncertainties
are considered as priority, in terms of their potential to improve understanding around
how consumer may react to certain policies:
• The potential for an accurate and reliable consumer segmentation model across
the EU: understanding the different groups of consumers, future trends in the
evolution of the EU population and demographics, and how they would react to
specific policy instruments is a key step in designing effective consumer policy.
However, it is currently uncertain whether such models can be applied at the EU
level.
June 2011
European Commission [DG ENV]
Expanding the Evidence Base for the Design of Policy Influencing Consumer
Choice for Products and Services with Environmental Impacts
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• The effects of displaying price: consumer policy instruments often involve the use
of financial instruments such as taxes and subsidies. The way in which a price
change due to government intervention is displayed to consumers is important and
can determine the effectiveness of the policy.
• Consumer behaviour in relation to specific products: depending on the type of
product in question (e.g. vehicles, energy using products, food, cosmetics, clothing,
etc.), different types of policies may be more effective.
When designing consumer policy, integration of evaluation and monitoring techniques also
need to be considered. Policy evaluation can contribute to the better understanding of
consumer behaviour and is beneficial both prior to the implementation of policies (ex-
ante), where they can contribute to the design, and for analysis of existing policies (ex-
post). Evaluation steps proposed include:
• Linking measures to policy: In a first step, it is essential to recognise that consumer
policies at the EU-level or at the national level are not sufficiently specific to enable
a direct evaluation of the impact of the policy on consumer behaviour.
• Linking measures to consumer behaviour: Once all the measures of a policy have
been identified, it is possible to plan the evaluation on a per-measure basis. A set
of research questions or hypotheses which articulate the predicted consumer
responses to each measure should be developed. The main challenge is thus to
determine which factors are relevant to which measure.
• Understanding possible outcomes: Different measures in different policy areas will
entail different outcomes. It is essential to understand the potential outcome of a
measure in order to find the correct data to assess its impact.
• Separating background trends from the effect of the measure: Baseline
developments need to be filtered out in order to identify the impact of the
measure.
• Examining how to make use of all evaluation results and deriving ex-ante
predictions about the likely outcome of certain measures; a complex EU-level
database could be set up to collect the data and allow for information sharing and
more informed consumer policy-making.
To conclude, the study has highlighted how consumer targeted policies can be more
effectively designed with knowledge from consumer behaviour research. However, key
barriers to more widespread research into consumer behaviour in the EU, and effective use
of this research, should also be addressed. The barriers include:
• Incorporating consumer behaviour into decision-making is not common practice
for policy makers, who do not always make the link between priority
environmental issues and consumer behaviour.
• Interdisciplinary research programmes are not common practice among
universities and institutions, as research tends to focus on one specific area (such
as transport or energy).
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European Commission [DG ENV]
Expanding the Evidence Base for the Design of Policy Influencing Consumer
Choice for Products and Services with Environmental Impacts
June 2011
• Retailer-academic collaboration is rare, and there may be barriers to overcome in
terms of sharing of commercially sensitive findings.
Such barriers could be overcome by setting up funding requirements to promote more
interdisciplinary research that also includes actors from the commercial and marketing
sectors.
In summary, the study has presented the key drivers of consumer behaviour and identified
a number of uncertainties about consumer behaviour that merit further research.
Guidance on designing and carrying out consumer behaviour experiments, and on setting
up policy evaluation frameworks, has been provided. The aim of this information is to
encourage research into consumer behaviour and policy evaluation, in order to improve
the effectiveness of policy to influence consumer choice related to products and services
with environmental impacts.